Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Britain says new Covid variant is the most significant yet found

Britain says new Covid variant is the most significant yet found

BRITAIN said on Friday (26) that a newly identified coronavirus variant spreading in South Africa was considered by scientists to be the most significant one yet found and so it needed to ascertain whether or not it made vaccines ineffective.

Defending a ban on flights from South Africa, Namibia, Botswana, Zimbabwe, Lesotho and Eswatini, transport secretary Grant Shapps said that the lesson of Covid was that early action was essential.


The UK Health Security Agency said that the variant - called B.1.1.529 - has a spike protein that was dramatically different to the one in the original coronavirus that Covid-19 vaccines are based on.

"As scientists have described, (this is) the most significant variant they've encountered to date in their research," Shapps told Sky News.

Officials have advised the government on the need to act swiftly and pre-emptively in case the concerns over the impact of the variant are borne out, even though it could take weeks to generate all the information needed about its characteristics.

The variant has also been found in Botswana and Hong Kong, but the UK Health Security Agency said that no cases of the variant had been detected in Britain.

Six African countries added to red-list

Six African countries will be added to England's travel "red list", Britain's health secretary Sajid Javid said on Thursday (25).

"UKHSA is investigating a new variant. More data is needed but we're taking precautions now," Javid said in a tweet.

"From noon tomorrow six African countries will be added to the red list, flights will be temporarily banned, and UK travellers must quarantine."

(Reuters)

More For You

Harshita Brella
Brella, 24, was found dead in the boot of a car in Ilford, London, in November last year.

Family seeks justice a year after Harshita’s killing

A YEAR after 24-year-old Harshita Brella was killed in the UK, her family in Delhi says they are still waiting for justice.

"Why has her killer not been caught yet? Neither the UK government nor the Indian government are doing anything," her mother Sudesh Kumari told the BBC. "I want justice for my daughter. Only then will I find peace."

Keep ReadingShow less